DOI: 10.1002/ps.71050 ISSN: 1526-498X

Human activities and climatic factors drive decoupling effects of parasitoids‐invasive agromyzid leafminers

Zhenan Jin, Haoxiang Zhao, Shiwei Yuan, Lan Huang, Weijie Wan, Sujie Du, Hongkun Huang, Fanhao Wan, Jianyang Guo, Wanxue Liu

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Human activities disrupt the parasitoid‐mediated control of invasive alien species by fragmenting habitats and intensifying temperature‐driven pest proliferation. However, the synergistic effects of changes in human‐modified landscapes and climatic gradients on parasitoid–herbivore interactions remain underexplored, limiting integrated pest management. Here, we mapped the habitat suitability and dispersal‐risk corridors of two invasive agromyzid leafminers ( Liriomyza sativae and Liriomyza trifolii ) and evaluated the effects of human activities and climate on the spatial association patterns of parasitoids‐agromyzid leafminers on Hainan Island.

RESULTS

The core risk patches and high‐risk dispersal corridors of the two species were concentrated in towns and cultivated crop‐growing areas in the northern plains and coastal regions, underscoring the key role of human activities in driving pest establishment and dispersal. As the temperature increased, human activities reduced the spatial association between agromyzid leafminers and parasitoids. In contrast, land use intensity strengthened their spatial association, likely indicating a trade‐off between habitat fragmentation and cropland resource diversity in the spatial association patterns of these two populations.

CONCLUSIONS

Our study reveals that human activities and climatic factors synergistically reduce spatial association patterns between parasitoids and invasive agromyzid leafminers. This pattern highlights a novel mechanism underlying pest–natural enemy mismatches and provides a conceptual basis for landscape‐level strategies to enhance biological control. © 2026 Society of Chemical Industry.

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